Just curious what people prefer. I started out using AAC because I read that it as a superior format. However, I've been getting better sound quality with AC3.
		
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	Depends a lot on the chosen encoder and on the chosen bitrate. 
 
 Depending on the phase of the moon , I may use AC3, AAC, DTS, MLP, MP2, MP3, and even the infamous ATRAC3 from Sony , I may use AC3, AAC, DTS, MLP, MP2, MP3, and even the infamous ATRAC3 from Sony 
 
 AC3 is considered perceptually-transparent at 128kbps per channel, whereas
 AAC (Low-Complexity) is considered perceptually-transparent at somewhere between 64kbps and 80kbps per channel.
 
 FWIW: Opus is the newest toy in the playground, and many people are liking it 
 Caveat: it's locked at the 48kHz sampling rate, possibly because ATRAC3 is locked at 44.1kHz  Last edited by El Heggunte; 21st Dec 2014 at 00:06. 
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	I prefer the original audio . But if you need low bitrates , then a good AAC encoder will wipe the floor against any AC3 implementation 
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	AC3 5.1 at 640 kb/s, for widest compatibility. And it's good enough. Pull! Bang! Darn!
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	This. A lot of hardware players have trouble with aac. Especially in a mkv container or 6 channel audio. I cannot understand why anyone would take a perfectly good ac3 file and convert it to aac unless all they have to play it back on is an Apple Player. Then I would recommend buying a cheap media player before recommending converting all their audio files to aac. 
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	I use AC-3 at 640 kb/s for my Blue-ray backups to MKV/H.264. For DVD backups, I just pass the existing AC-3 through. 
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	I do exactly the same as Redwudz. SONY 75" Full array 200Hz LED TV, Yamaha A1070 amp, Zidoo UHD3000, BeyonWiz PVR V2 (Enigma2 clone), Chromecast, Windows 11 Professional, QNAP NAS TS851


 
		
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